F
figsfiggyfigs
Guest
Yeah I'd say that going by the second Assassins creed game lol
LOL!!!!!
Yeah I'd say that going by the second Assassins creed game lol
That goal of that remark was to make yourself a little better than those who point out that they are better than others, though, wasn't it?
Everyone is in a hierarchy. It's part of human nature.
Trying to deny that some actually do know, invent, lead, create and think better than others is only in benefit to ignorants.
The only thing that has saved earth from complete stupification is that some individuals are, through word and deed, grudgingly accepted as most peoples' betters.
Pretending to be stupid or not showing superior intelligence to the world only makes you afraid of conflicts, my dear footballer robot
Realize that after you ticked all your professional goals on your life's checklist, you'll have to think of something else to do.
Realize that money, power, technology, science all suck ass in the end. And there are many things left when you've taken those off of one's life....
I'm in need of advice. Although anyone who knows me well thinks I'm fundamentally a nice person, on a superficial level I am not particularly. While there are pragmatic take-over-the-world-and-get-rich reasons to change this, I also simply believe that people who take a small exta minute to consider others live intrinsically better lives. Any INTJs (or others with advice) out there with stories about how to overcome the lingering, counterproductive oh-my-god-this-person-is-an-idiot sentiment?
I feel for you. I have met a strong T (ENTP, possibly) that I seriously wanted to punch because he was so dense and lacked a basic knowledge base at the age of 28.I see where you're coming from, but seriously, these people have very few strengths. Not that I'd tell them that, but it's kinda true.
I suppose if I were to give these 'unintelligent' sort of people 'strengths', I would say that they seem to make good company for each other. But that's about it.
Yeah well that's basically most SPs. But it's not just memorising. Most don't like learning much at all. And yes, that's a generalisation.
Use your Te-Fi to develop pseudo-Fe for practical reasons.
I see where you're coming from, but seriously, these people have very few strengths. Not that I'd tell them that, but it's kinda true.
I suppose if I were to give these 'unintelligent' sort of people 'strengths', I would say that they seem to make good company for each other. But that's about it.
Not certain why this would be meaningful. There appears to be an element of resentment buried in this statement.
Don't really know how you overcome the "is an idiot" phrase. It's not always counterproductive since ascertaining incompetence helps to allocate resources in a professional environment.